I am part of a lost generation and I refuse to believe I can change the world
I realise this may be a shock but
“Happiness comes from within”
is a lie, and
“Money will make me happy”
So in 30 years I will tell my children
They are not the most important thing in my life
My employer will know that I have my priorities straight because
Work
Is more important than
Family
I tell you this
Once upon a time
Families stayed together
But this will not be true in my era
This is a quick fix society
Experts tell me
30 years from now I will be celebrating the 10th anniversary of my divorce
I do not concede that
I will live in a country of my own making
In the future
Environmental destruction will be the norm
No longer can it be said that
My peers and I care about this earth
It will be evidence that
My generation is apathetic and lethargic
It is foolish to presume that
There is hope
And all this will come true unless we choose to reverse it
There is hope
It is foolish to presume that
My generation is apathetic and lethargic
It will be evidence that
My peers and I care about this earth
No longer can it be said that
Environmental destruction will be the norm
In the future
I will live in a country of my own making
I do not concede that
30 years from now I will be celebrating the 10th anniversary of my divorce
Experts tell me
This is a quick fix society
But this will not be true in my era
Families stayed together
Once upon a time
I tell you this
Family
Is more important than
Work
I have my priorities straight because
My employer will know that
They are not the most important thing in my life
So in 30 years I will tell my children
“Money will make me happy”
Is a lie, and
“Happiness comes from within”
I realise this may be a shock,
but I can change the world and I refuse to belief I am part of a lost generation.
(via Shirley Raven Tique)
11 Things the Simpsons Got Right about 2010... in 1995!
Worth a look and a read. The Simpsons’ writers nailed a few things when predicting what life would be like 15 years in the future.
3D Multi-touch Prototype for Augmented and Virtual Reality
It seems like everyone is cooking up their own touch-free gesture-based control technology, just like every blogger is destined to refer to it as “Minority Report-like” or “Minority Report-esque,” or “Tom Cruise-tastic!” Fraunhofer’s FIT, the newest such project, looks pretty darn good. Not only does it not require special gloves or markers, this thing also works in real time and can support multiple users (and multiple fingers). The researchers hope to use this for working with complex simulation data and in education, although there are some kinks to be worked out: currently elements like the reflections caused by wristwatches and the orientation of the palm confuses the system. That said, the demo is pretty rad!
Smart Street Lights Know How To Bloom
The concept Sustainable City Lights is an intelligent lighting system that harnesses solar and wind energy for itself. These are lampposts intuitive enough to beam up the LEDs only when people are around, else emit a soft glow.
Adapting itself to the environment, Sustainable City Lights mimic the opening and closing of a flower bud while harvesting the energies. Any surplus accumulated goes back to the main grid for powering other city things.
It’s kinda an arb video but, hotdamn, if it ain’t a step closer to having Nightowl style goggles!
Make anything touch-sensitive
Wowsa! Portugal-based company, Displax, has invented a polymer film that can make virtually anything touch-sensitive. The film, called “Skin” can be attached to almost any surface - transparent, opaque, or even curved. The only limitation is that the surface can’t be conductive - so unfortunately you can’t stick this film to your fridge to instruct it when to give you food if that’s what you’re planning.
Skin uses something called “projected capacitive technology” which allows it to detect the touch of a finger or even a wisp of directed breath even if it is underneath a thin sheet of glass. This opens up a number of possibilities for museums, galleries and any other businesses that may want to display interactive data.
MusicDNA, the new MP3 on the block
The days of listening to music in MP3 file format will soon receive competition from MusicDNA.
MusicDNA is aiming to take the way users experience their music to the next level. The new format can be considered a tree of the popular MP3 format as its creator, Dagfinn Bach, worked on the very first MP3 player. One of the investors in MusicDNA is also Karlheinz Bradenburg , who is credited as the creator of MP3 files.
The new format is set to provide more than just music, as it can contain lyrics, videos, artwork and even blog postings. The benefit of the new system is that data will be updated real-time. Bands will also have the ability to inform owners of their music about their tours and future releases by sending updates to the file. This allows for the music to also become a form of advertising directly between artists and their fans.
Its creators are hoping that MusicDNA will make music more personal again, as in the days when they used to buy LP records and they contained an emotional value.
5 Super Powers You Can Have Today
Everybody wants superpowers, from the simple innocence of a child yearning for flight to the sad perversion of the Amish man praying for x-ray vision powerful enough to peep a lady’s calves. We all want to be superhuman, and you can start right now! This is but a sample of some of the currently existing (or soon to be developed) devices that can lend the average man abilities previously relegated to world of comic books.
- Super Speed
- Bullet Proofing
- Invisibility
- Web Swinging
- Super Sight
10 obsolete technologies to kill in 2010
Some old-and-busted technologies die gracefully of natural causes. Pagers, PDAs, floppy disks — they’re gone, and good riddance.
But other obsolete tech lingers on, even though better alternatives abound that are easier, cheaper, higher quality and much more efficient.
Mike Elgan points out some technologies that we should get rid of in 2010, such as fax machines, cigarette lighter receptacles, landline phones, and music CDs.
Search, but You May Not Find
Interesting read…
AS we become increasingly dependent on the Internet, we need to be increasingly concerned about how it is regulated. The Federal Communications Commission has proposed “network neutrality” rules, which would prohibit Internet service providers from discriminating against or charging premiums for certain services or applications on the Web. The commission is correct that ensuring equal access to the infrastructure of the Internet is vital, but it errs in directing its regulations only at service providers like AT&T and Comcast.
Today, search engines like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft’s new Bing have become the Internet’s gatekeepers, and the crucial role they play in directing users to Web sites means they are now as essential a component of its infrastructure as the physical network itself. The F.C.C. needs to look beyond network neutrality and include “search neutrality”: the principle that search engines should have no editorial policies other than that their results be comprehensive, impartial and based solely on relevance.
The need for search neutrality is particularly pressing because so much market power lies in the hands of one company: Google. With 71 percent of the United States search market (and 90 percent in Britain), Google’s dominance of both search and search advertising gives it overwhelming control. Google’s revenues exceeded $21 billion last year, but this pales next to the hundreds of billions of dollars of other companies’ revenues that Google controls indirectly through its search results and sponsored links.
One way that Google exploits this control is by imposing covert “penalties” that can strike legitimate and useful Web sites, removing them entirely from its search results or placing them so far down the rankings that they will in all likelihood never be found. For three years, my company’s vertical search and price-comparison site, Foundem, was effectively “disappeared” from the Internet in this way.
Another way that Google exploits its control is through preferential placement. With the introduction in 2007 of what it calls “universal search,” Google began promoting its own services at or near the top of its search results, bypassing the algorithms it uses to rank the services of others. Google now favors its own price-comparison results for product queries, its own map results for geographic queries, its own news results for topical queries, and its own YouTube results for video queries. And Google’s stated plans for universal search make it clear that this is only the beginning.
Because of its domination of the global search market and ability to penalize competitors while placing its own services at the top of its search results, Google has a virtually unassailable competitive advantage. And Google can deploy this advantage well beyond the confines of search to any service it chooses. Wherever it does so, incumbents are toppled, new entrants are suppressed and innovation is imperiled.




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